Suggestion:
Fill your receiver up until the compressor switches off / unloads.
Question 1: What is its pressure (Bar / kPA / PSI) ?
Question 2: What is your receiver (air tank) size (LITER /
UK GALLON /
US GALLON)?
Question 3: What is the minimum air pressure requirement of your ATC / tool cooling (Bar / kPA / PSI)?
Question 4: Are you using a regulated air supply to your ATC? {you should be, what is its setting (Bar / kPA / PSI)?}
Question 5: Are you using a regulated air supply to your tool cooling? {you should be, what is its setting (Bar / kPA / PSI)?}
Question 6: Ok, now get a stopwatch, and run a couple of minutes of Gcode (either time the pressure drop or check the differential pressure after a set period). What did your get?
Pressure drop of ??? (kPA / Bar / PSI) ....... what was your time limit (seconds / minutes)?
This is not a very accurate way to measure the air demand...... because its just one piece of g-code..... and I'm not sure if your ATC just requires an occasional pulse of air or a constant air flow..... (you mentioned "...Im running a columbo ATC spindle that uses pressed air for cooling." (unfortunately it means little to nothing to me....)
So you may require a little further explanation of what exactly you require the airflow for and what is constant and what is periodic demand????
Question 7: (HAVE THAT STOPWATCH HANDY) run off the air (slowly) opening a bypass / drain tap..... at what pressure does the compressor trip in at (kPA / BAR / PSI)?
Question 8: time how long it takes to fill the receiver from the compressor cut-in to the compressor cut-out (unload valve open) (seconds / minutes)
Question 9: running your machine normally how long does it take for your compressor to cut back in from the time the machine starts and the receiver air pressure drops (this one is relates to question 6).
Do you know what the rating of your air compressor is? 4HP normally implies 3-phase as they are normally 3HP (which is ~2.2kW and therefore ~10A at 220V), 4hp is ~2.9kW ~ bit over 13A..... which is normally the rating of a std plugtop (I know that in south africa they do a standard round pin plugtop which is unfused and rated at 16A)
Ive done a fair bit with compressors and testing home / hobby compressors..... {I have a few :/ } ..... basically I got a few small brass plugs and drilled different size holes in the end of them using carburetor drills (as they have fine increments.....) and then charged the receivers up opened up the air valves and ran the tanks down until when the compressors kicked in and checked what the pressure would stabilize at (air out = air in)...... given I knew the orifice size I was able to approximate the actual air compressor volume delivered at a known air pressure and could then approximate that to other air pressures
https://www.tlv.com/global/UK/calculato ... ifice.html